arlos wrote:Honestly, I haven't followed the case terribly closely, but I have 1 simple question:
Whatever they did, would they have gotten other passengers talking about "Suspicious actions and anti-american comments" if they'd NOT been islamic?
Say it was 6 rabbis? How about 6 Southern Baptist Ministers doing *EXACTLY* the same actions?
If the outcome of the situation would have been ANY different, then there's an issue with racism. If what they did is so bad that 6 white guys in business suits who did it would've been pulled off the plane, detained by DHS, etc., then sure, throw the book at them. If the ONLY reason they were subject to such treatment is the fact that they're Arab/Muslims... then there's a problem.
-Arlos
Statements by the Imam's, various Islamic interests groups are trying to paint the issue as one that arose not out of racial prejudice but out of religious intolerance. Mainly the assertions are that the issue arose for the most part over prayers.
If you consider the number of people of Arabic decent who fly every day without incident, and the general seriousness and sensitivity our society currently places on racial issues, the idea that it was religious prejudice is a much more buyable angel if you will.
That being said, with everything I've seen and read on the issue (Washington Times article aside), especially with Shahin's past involvements and affiliations, and statements made by CAIR, this appears more and more to me as a political ploy and setup.